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VOL. L LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1958 NO. 41
— PAGE TWO —
Beat Generation Poet Warms Up In SU
Southern
DAI LY
California
TROJAN
— PAGE THREE —
Crime Situation, Area Rehabilitation Studied
ASSC Soon to Air Senate Council Plan
The senator reorganization committee, headed by Senator-at-large Barbara Myers, has finally arrived at a plan for the reorganization of the Senate to Vie presen;ed at the regular meeting Wednesday.
The proposal, submitted by Senaior Da>le Barnes, at this week's Senate forum, states in offeet ihai there would still be nine senators, but they would iorm a senatorial council to de-1 'rmine specific duties and adopt jobs thai require particular at-tenlion. Barnes slated that this would coordinate ihe group and maintain flexibility while still dealing with specifc problems. <)’*cn Meeting
Barnes also proposed that the senatorial council conduct an open meeting once a month for members oi the ASSC.
At the.-e meetings, students could piescnt problems and leg-islation 1o the Senatorial Council which would l»e discussed and voted upon. If ihe council agreed that the measures were worthwhile. it would then be brought 1d the ASSC Senate. Barnes fa id that 1 his would give the students an opportunity to become a true part of student government. and would give the senators the same opportunity to meet with ihe people they are representing.
Feasible Plan
Barnes' proposal was praised by the senators in attendance the forum and Miss Myers said that she thought the plan was feasible. She said, "it fulfills what we started out to do by giving the senators specific duties and still it leaves the group elastic enough to handle any problems which might arise, or issues the students want to introduce through Hie senatorial council.” She added that it would probably stimulate more jnterest in student government.
Senator-ai-large Trish Dwyer , said that she favored the proposal because it would solve the problem of disunity among the senators and aid them in acting as a legislative body. “It would facilitate the process of helping one another and working together,” she added.
By-Law Amendment
Barnes said, "once the senators have coordinated themselves. they can begin reorganizing the standing committees correcting some of ihe overlap in our student government system and make it a more mobile and working body.”
The proposal will be a by-law amendment rather than a con-
Reading Set To Feature War Story
“An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge," a story of the Civil War period, will be read at todays’ noon reading in 129 FH by Harry Reed, assistant professor of English.
The story, by Ambrose Bierce, concerns a Confederate saboteur who attempts to undermine the Union Army.
Bierce, born in 1842, served with the Union Army during the Civil War. Following the war. hr went to San Francisco and then F.ngland. He returned to San Francisco where he engaged in journalistic work and achieved most of his fame.
“He was always a strange personality.” Reed explained. “He was often icrmed a misanthrope and his stories reflect his per-
slitulional amendment and will require a two-thirds vote of the Senate to be passed. It will be submitted to Parliamentarian George Young bei ore presentation by Miss Myers to the Senate Wednesdav.
Llomnmlnt N e ws m a n Lauds Nehru As
Program Here
DAYLE BARNES
. . . new plan
SMILE
El Rodeo Lists Pic Schedule For Dec.-Jan.
The El Rodeo shooting schedule this week will include the following organizations: Alpha
Epsilon Pi, Alpha Rho Chi, Alpha Tau Omega. Beta Theta Pi, Alpha Phi Omegoa, Kappa Alpha Psi, Delta Sigma Phi and Pi Beta Phi.
Fraternities and sororities should make appointments at least a week in advance at the photo office.
Men are to wear white shirts with black or very dark V-neck sweaters. Women are to wear w hite or very light pastel round-neck. plain sweaters. Clothing will not be provided at the photo office.
Bring S2 when the picture is taken, otherwise there will be no picture. If the picture is not taken when the organization is scheduled, it will then cost S3.
For men. last year’s picture may be used with a payment of S2.
The shooting schedule for the rest of the year:
Nov. 24-26: Delia Tau Delta, Kappa Alpha. Kappa Sigma, Dental Seniors. Lambda Chi Alpha. Phi Delta Theta. Phi Delta Chi.
Dec. 1-5: Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kaopa Psi. Chi Phi. Alpha ; Kppa Psi. Phi Kaopa Tau, Phi Sigma Kappa. Psi Upsilon.
Dec. 8-12: Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Sigma Alpha Mu. Delta Chi, Delta Sigma Delta, Sigma Chi, Siema Nu.
Dec. 15-19: Sigma Phi Delta, Tau Delta Phi. Tau Kappa Epsilon. Ball & Chain, Tau Epsilon Phi. Theta Chi.
Jan. 5-9: Thf*ta Xi. Zeta Beta Tau. Knights. Squires. Delta Sigma Pi. Blue Key, Psi Omega.
(Editor's Note: This is the second of a series of articles hy Daily Trojan reporter N'ita Biss on SC’s government contracts, projects which hring millions of dollars in Federal research money to campus each year. Today’s article is on Ihe Pakistan Project.
By MTA BISS Twenty representatives of the Pakistani Government are currently engaged in a 6-month Executive Development Program conducted by SC's School of Public Administration.
The basis of the program is an agreement between the U.S. and Pakistani Governments, and SC is conducting the project under a contract with the International Cooperation Administration. a division of the U.S. j State Department.
S4 Million This project is one of the many being carried out at SC bv the means of contracts secured from the federal government. These contracts total more i than $4 million annually.
The Pakistani representatives, all of them male, are high-level administrators of the Republic of Pakistan and are members of the Superior Civil Services | of Pakistan.
“The Superior Civil Services constitute an elite administra-; tive class selected by rigorous competitive examination in the tradition of the British Civil Service.” explained SC’s Dr. Robert H. Berkov, director of the project.
Traveled Officials
"Those considered to have the highest executive potential, after several years of service, arc selected by the Government of Pakistan for participation in the program at SC,” he said.
All Pakistani officials are university graduates. Some have
advanced degrees, and some
have previously visited Europe,
Canada and Australia in connection with their own government’s training programs.
The program consists of four phases, the first of which involves seminars, lectures and discussions on concepts of public administration in the United States.
8-Week Visit
The second phase is one of “on-the-job” assignments in vvh'»ch the Pakistani administrators observe American executives at work in government agencies and commercial enterprises.
The group is presently en-
Great and Righteous Leader
Points to Indias Place in World
By JOE SALTZMAN
Jawaharal Nehru, the man and his people, and India's place in our modern world, were explained by Clay Osborne, radio newsman, Friday in a 69th-birthday-cele-bration-for-Nehru speech sponsored by the Indian Student
Association.
IR Department Plays Host to Many Leaders
By JUDY ASHKENAZY
The influence of SC travels to almost every continent of the world today as a result of the U.S. State Department's foreign-leader program.
Every two days the School of International Relations, serving as the foreign-leader coordination center in the Los Angeies area, plays host to a different visitor to the United States. At program on radio station KPOP. : sc from three-days to two-
In a burst of enthusiastic acclaim to Nehru, Osborn said that "I applaud him as a man. a philosopher, a statesmen, a great thinker and above all a brother human being.”
He said that Nehru is leading his people towards a way of righteousness and he will not be destroyed.
Own Path
“Nehru has not aligned himself with either Russia or the United States for he has said that he will follow the path of India,” he said.
“And this simple choice of Nehru and his people, essentially that of Gandhi and Jesus, is the way of the spirit and the righteousness.”
Osborne, assistant of “Air” a
SWEETHEART OF SIGMA CHI - Making plans for the crowning of this year's sweetheart on a national television program are
(l-r) Bill Thompson, Sandy Quinn and the show's star Eddie Fisher. Seated is last year's official sweetheart, Laurie Harwood.
SWEETHEART ON TV
Sigma
Queen
Chis Plan Contest
to the door of the house. Ameri-ican Airlines loaned the carpet to the Sigma Chi's.
The dinners will be attended by Eddie Fisher,
gaged in this phase of the pro- I enter a contestant, ject and the members are begin- ... ■„ j
ning their fourth week of the The contestants will attend a
eight-week assignment. j s^eunesu of dinnei'sif the f*"“
One of the officials is work- Chl house' ufntl1 the numbf.r iS ing with the Chief Administra- 7 returnmg finai-
tive Officer of the City of Los 1S^ for Thursday.
Angeles and two are working Sandy Quinn and Bill Thomp-with the Chief Administrative : son- co-chairmen of the event,
The 70th annual Sweetheart of Sigma Chi crowning will be televised coast to coast on the Eddie Fisher Show Dec. 9.
The contest will begin Monday Dec. 1, with more than , seParate]y twenty girls competing. Each Chancellor Rufus B. von Klein- tra. recently celebrated the 25th sorority house and domitory will , Smid. President Norman H. Top-1 anniversary of his first appear-
Piano Artists Will Perform On Campus
SC will be the first to hear Rudolf Serkin. internationally acclaimed pianist, when he will play his first Southern California recital next Sunday evening in Bovard Auditorium.
Serkin, who has appeared 17 times as soloist with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orches-
said that there is a challenging conflict between the spirit being India and the atom, the United States and Russia.
Dogmatic Statements “Moscow and Washington continually make dogmatic statements warning the world that what we say, the world must do,” he said. j
He said that the West had
preached brotherhood for 250 years and have not practiced it. “Yet, India stands for brotherhood.” he said.
Comparing modem India with ■ the United States during the
mid 1700’s, Osborne said that
“India, today, represents all I that was good in the United States in during that time—the sole thought of freedom and the dignity of the individual.” The Declaration of Indepednce idea has found its counterpart in a new India, which today, so
vividly reminds us the way America used to be.”
Freedom Fighters
“Nehru," he asserted, “reminds us of Jefferson. Franklin
Officer of Riverside County. Numerous Assignments A number have been assigned to citv managers in Long Beach,
said that the women will be escorted to the house in new Cadillacs, donated through the countesy of the General Motors
Beverly Hills. Burbank, Downey, dealers in thé Los Angeles area.
Glendale, Inglewood and Santa Upon arrival at the house, the
Monica. j women will w^alk on a $700 red
(Continued on Page 2) 1 carpet, extending from the cars
ping, and radio announcer Don Wilson.
Each evening a smaller number of girls will be invited to return. Thursday evening the five finalists will display their charm, in hopes of being the one to be declared “Sweetheart of Sigma Chi” the following Tuesday evening.
The five finalists will be honored at a dance to be held at the fashionable Bel-Aire Country
and other great freedom fight-ance before an American alidi- erg wj1Q dedicated their lives and enee at the 1933 Coolidge testi- fortunes to something beyond
themselves.
He explained that Nehru had an extensive intellectual background and. born of wealthy parents, felt that he had to go bevond himself to do something
val in Washington, D. C.
Since 1936, when he made his public debut in the U.S. with the New York Philharmonic Symphony under the direction of the late Arturo Toscanini, he has toured annually throughout the ajjOUt poverty and sufferin United States and Canada. hjs nation.
In the summers Serkin is ar- “Nehru saw
tistic director of the the Marlboro Music Festival in Vermont and frequently, since 1950, has
Club, Saturday Dec. 6. The El- traveled to the French Pyrenees liot Brothers will provide t h e to join Pablo Casals for the orchestration. ‘ Prades Festivals.
Med. Center Slates Tests
sona lily
R?ed s F>ierce's st>. the ihcmc. terror, war a!
Reed ha< lai war si
i d that most of ries have death as Hr wrote stories of and tlv' supematur-
ch'i'cn this parlicu->rv because it is an
example of historical fiction.
Business Guide On Sale Today
“Career: for the College Man.” an annual guide to business opportuni >s. has l'een published and v i!i be distributed on campus today.
Although the guide is d^r-ign^-j principally for sen or and graduate students, cop es will be on hand at the job placement office for interested undergraduate students
Unique to “Career” this year Is the College Interview Index.
complete cross reference showing recruiting season visits planed by employers.
A free glucose tolerance test for the detection of diabetes will be given at the SC Health Center starting today until Friday.
According to Dr. Paul O. Greely. medical director, these tests for both students and university personnel are being run in conjunction with National Diabetos Detection Week held Nov. 17 to 21. It is for determining not only diabetics but also tho<e who are potential diabetics.
The cause of diabetes is not known, but there is a successful treatment available said Dr. Greeley. Through the potential H abetic we hone to be able to find some clues as to what causes the disease.
The tests can only detect the disease or find those who have a tendency for it. but diabetes cannot be prevented.
The test involves drinking a solution of sugar water.
I.n two hours a blood sugar test end ui*analysis are given to detect the disease. The results will be mailed out in a week.
These lests usually cost about $5 They are valuable because ! diabetics are much more susceptible to infectious diseases.
“Anyone who is interested in the free checkup is urged to come to the center,” he con-
I eluded.
that spiritual values by themselves are important but are not enough in a society of suffering,” he said.
Pure Road
He said that Nehru has taken an almost pure road of socialism because he saw that the capitalistic idea cf “profit motive” leads to excesses of greed.
“He s a w that capitalistic economics lead to the political, economic and even moral domination over the masses,” he said.
Osborne warned that Nehru will not align himself with any force which does not have principles.
Plus Strings
“This was the primary rea-
weeks, these leaders return to their countries with the influences and impressions that the university has given them.
Broaden Knowledge
They come to the university to broaden their professional knowledge and acquaint themselves with the American college reports Jim Hancock, administrative assistant on the foreign-leader program.
"These people represent the cultural rather than governmental aspects of their countries. They are artists, business rn^n, journalists, educators, professional people and social workers,” he said.
City Guides
Students in the School of International Relations serve as campus and city guides for the visitors. •
"IR students are encouraged to volunteer as guides and chauffeurs for the program,” Hancock said.
Under the direction of Dr. Paul Hadley, associate professor of international relations, the program will bring to campus in the next two months a Pakistani film distributor, an Indian college president and four professors. an Egyptian film-studio producer, a Pakistani educator, a Japanese college president, a Uruguayan actress and the commissioner of the Pakistan Girl Guides.
Recent visitors have included an Italian television actress, a Thai journalist, a Cambodian educator, a Brazilian actress and a Chinese educator.
Many Attend Coffee Hour
More than 70 students packed the International Students ! Lounge last Friday for a coffee | hour with the purpose of introducing the American students ! on campus to different interna-
| tional ciubs.
Sponsored by the Indian Stu-
son lie has refused U.S. help be- dents Association and Arabian cause America has offered j Students Association in con-much-needed money with vair- junction with the International ous strings attached.” j Students Council this was the
Nehru is never neutral in f'rst attempt by Isaias Medina, principle, he said, and he is a ! foreign student’s representative, (Continued on Page 2) to unif-v the American and for-
---------------------------eign students on the SC campus.
—. . J CL l. “This is one way,” said Ghazi
Diamond-bhotgun Khankan. president of the Arabian Students Association.” in which the American students I can get to know p^opl^ from other nations. In a way it saves them money. Instead of traveling to Europe to all the foreign countries to meet these peooln, American students accomplish this at these coffee hours.”
Swap For Real
“SWAP — Diamond ring for shotgun.”
This campus classified ad was not submitted by a distraught lover, wanting to seek revenge with a shotgun, but by a wholesale diamond broker who just wants to go hunting.
Robert Hensley, a graduate in gemology. with newly established business headquarters at 832 W. Jefferson Blvd., placed the ad in Fridav's Daily Trojan with hopes of proeurring a shotgun fessor of English, wil be master for a coming hunting trip in ex- of cei-emonies at a Nov. 23 tri-change for a diamond—of which bute to poet Car! Sandburg in
Baxter to Host Stars at UCLA
Dr. Frank C. Baxter. SC pro-
he has many.
Hensley received an early re-
Rovce Hall at UCLA. Beginning at 8:30 p.m..
the
ARABIAN DANCING—Teaching an Arabian dance to students attending the international students coffee hour here Friday are (I to r) Ghazi Khankan, Carol Berman, Ahmad Zamel, George Hard, Avis Bouteli, Ron Mitchell, Kay Yunk-
Daily Trojan Photo by M. A. Faruki er, Ghulam Safi, Heather Campbell, Peter Lauwerys, Diane Bolstad, Sam Sabri, Syed Hasan, Kathy O'Brien, Joe Tuliao and Wafiyyah Shahin.
sponse to the ad — from the ; program will include such Hol-poliee station across the street, j lywood stars as Yul Brynner, Officers questioned his inten- , Clen Ford. Eva Marie Saint, Fd-tions and asked what he plan-1 die Albert, Jeanne Crain. Frank ned to use the gun for and if Lovejoy, Shirley Melaine. Jeff he had a girl friend. Matters Hunter, James Gleason. Mala were soon clarified, but Hens- Powers and Francis X. Bush-ley's still looking for a shotgun, man.

VOL. L LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1958 NO. 41
— PAGE TWO —
Beat Generation Poet Warms Up In SU
Southern
DAI LY
California
TROJAN
— PAGE THREE —
Crime Situation, Area Rehabilitation Studied
ASSC Soon to Air Senate Council Plan
The senator reorganization committee, headed by Senator-at-large Barbara Myers, has finally arrived at a plan for the reorganization of the Senate to Vie presen;ed at the regular meeting Wednesday.
The proposal, submitted by Senaior Da>le Barnes, at this week's Senate forum, states in offeet ihai there would still be nine senators, but they would iorm a senatorial council to de-1 'rmine specific duties and adopt jobs thai require particular at-tenlion. Barnes slated that this would coordinate ihe group and maintain flexibility while still dealing with specifc problems. ierce's st>. the ihcmc. terror, war a!
Reed ha< lai war si
i d that most of ries have death as Hr wrote stories of and tlv' supematur-
ch'i'cn this parlicu->rv because it is an
example of historical fiction.
Business Guide On Sale Today
“Career: for the College Man.” an annual guide to business opportuni >s. has l'een published and v i!i be distributed on campus today.
Although the guide is d^r-ign^-j principally for sen or and graduate students, cop es will be on hand at the job placement office for interested undergraduate students
Unique to “Career” this year Is the College Interview Index.
complete cross reference showing recruiting season visits planed by employers.
A free glucose tolerance test for the detection of diabetes will be given at the SC Health Center starting today until Friday.
According to Dr. Paul O. Greely. medical director, these tests for both students and university personnel are being run in conjunction with National Diabetos Detection Week held Nov. 17 to 21. It is for determining not only diabetics but also tho